Did Clinton cause 9/11? Ask Sandy Berger

That's the new loyalty oath propagated by The Nation, which just published a long column "exposing" the fact that the director of ABC's docudrama "The Path to 9/11," David Cunningham, is the son of a fundamentalist Christian, and may in fact himself be a Christian:

"Cunningham is no ordinary Hollywood journeyman. He is in fact the son of Loren Cunningham, founder of the right-wing evangelical group Youth With a Mission ..."

Christians in film and TV? Horrors! Root out these evil alien influences lock, stock and barrel!

About 13 million Americans watched "The Path to 9/11" this week, about the same number as viewed Katie Couric's newsreader, um "anchor," debut. I was not one of them, in either case: I don't normally watch network news, and I consider the docudrama a particularly repellent genre.

Nor am I especially interested in dwelling on who could be blamed (other than Islamofascists) for 9/11. I presume that Bill Clinton, for all his obvious flaws, is a normal, patriotic American who, if he had recognized the danger and known how to prevent it, would certainly have done so. I didn't see the 1993 World Trade Tower attack as the start of World War III, and neither did anyone else I know, including the Clinton administration. There is a lot of water under that bridge, and obsessive hatred of Bill Clinton bores me.

And yet the hissy fit Bill Clinton and his former colleagues threw calling for ABC to pull this TV movie is also deeply repellent.

It's not just that Bill Clinton is married to the leading Democractic candidate for the presidency (who might have a lot to say about television broadcast regulation), or that Harry Reid, who called on ABC to pull the movie, could be Senate majority leader in a few months. No, it is the sheer chutzpah of Clinton's National Security Adviser Samuel R. ("Sandy") Berger, complaining that ABC is tinkering with the historical record.

Here is how The Washington Post reported Berger's criminal conviction in April 2005, for, let us say, less-than-pristine concerns about preserving the historical record:

"Samuel R. 'Sandy' Berger, a former White House national security adviser, plans to plead guilty to a misdemeanor, and will acknowledge intentionally removing and destroying copies of a classified document about the Clinton administration's record on terrorism. ... The deal's terms make clear that Berger spoke falsely last summer in public claims that in 2003 he twice inadvertently walked off with copies of a classified document during visits to the National Archives, then later lost them. ...